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10 Jan 2005 17:50:28 -0000

 

 

 

The Food Bubble Economy

press-release

 

 

The Institute of Science in Society Science Society

Sustainability http://www.i-sis.org.uk

 

General Enquiries sam Website/Mailing List

press-release ISIS Director m.w.ho

========================================================

 

 

ISIS Press Release 10/01/05

 

SiS Review

 

The Food Bubble Economy

***********************

 

Dr. Mae-Wan Ho reviews Plan B: Rescuing a Planet under

Stress and a Civilization in Trouble, by Lester Brown, Earth

Policy Institute, W.W. Norton & Company, New York, 2003,

ISBN 0-393-05859-X

 

Buy now from

 

Amazon.com

www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0393325237/instituofsc0c-20

 

Amazon.co.uk

www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0393325237/instituofscie-21

 

 

The food bubble facing imminent collapse

 

Global warming is happening; and at a much faster, more

abrupt rate than projected by the International Panel on

Climate Change (IPCC) (see " Abrupt climate change

happening " , SiS 20).

 

The news media have been filled with reports of heat waves,

floods, droughts, hurricanes, accelerated melting of the

polar ice caps and sea levels rising. And yet, they may be

missing the most serious consequence of climate change

that's staring us in the face: a collapse of food production

on a global scale; or as Lester Brown of Earth Policy

Institute puts it, " the bursting of the food bubble " .

 

The economy must be restructured at " wartime speed " , Lester

Brown says, because we have built an " environmental bubble

economy " , where economic output is artificially inflated by

over-consumption of the earth's natural resources. He adds:

" the destruction wrought by terrorists is likely to be small

compared with the worldwide suffering if the environmental

bubble economy collapses. "

 

This same warning was first put forward no less forcefully

by Edward Goldsmith and colleagues in A Blueprint for

Survival published in 1972, and echoed by many since;

notably Paul Hawken's The Ecology of Commerce (1993) and

David Korten's When Corporations Rule the World (1995).

 

What's new in Lester Brown's message is that the most

vulnerable economic sector may be food. Food production is

facing imminent collapse unless the urgent problems of water

shortage, overpopulation and rising temperatures are tackled

right away. (And no, he does not think GM crops are the

answer to feeding the world.)

 

Water is fast running out

 

The world is fast running out of water after decades of

unsustainable over-pumping of aquifers to expand food

production to feed a growing world population. Water tables

have fallen sharply and rapidly in scores of countries

including China, India and the United States, which together

produce nearly half of the world's grain. Other more

populous countries with depleted aquifers include Pakistan,

Iran and Mexico. As water tables fall, rivers fail to reach

the sea, lakes disappear and wells dry up.

 

Conventional industrial agriculture is extremely water-

intensive. It takes 1000 tonnes of water to produce a tonne

of grain. Worldwide, 70 % of all the water diverted from

rivers or pumped from underground is used for irrigation;

20% is used by industry and 10% for residential purposes.

 

Growing needs of industry is diverting irrigation water from

agriculture, and countries are turning to grain imports to

make up for the shortfall. A person drinks 4 litres of water

a day and an additional 2 000 litres is needed to produce

the food eaten. In rich countries where grain is consumed to

feed livestock, the water needed to produce food per person

can easily reach 4 000 litres a day.

 

Water shortages are generating conflicts between upstream

and downstream claimants.

 

Crops cease to produce at high temperatures

 

Another challenge facing farmers to keep up productivity is

global warming. The 16 warmest years since record -keeping

began in 1880 all occurred from1980 onwards, the three

warmest years were 1998, 2001 and 2003. Crops are facing

heat stresses that are without precedent.

 

As the temperature rises above 34 C, photosynthesis slows

down, dropping to zero for many crops at 37 C. At that

temperature, corn plants in the US Corn Belt suffer from

heat shock and dehydration, shrinking the harvest.

Researchers at the International Rice Research Institute in

the Philippines and the US Department of Agriculture

developed a rule of thumb that each deg C rise in

temperature above the optimum during the growing season

reduces grain yields by 10%. Thus, according to projections

of the IPCC – which some say is already an underestimate -

grain harvests in tropical regions could be reduced by an

average of 5-11 percent by 2020 and 11-46 percent by 2050.

 

Research at Ohio State University indicates that as

temperature rises, photosynthesis increases until 20C, and

then plateaus until 35C when it begins to decline, ceasing

entirely at 40C. At that temperature, the plant is in

thermal shock, simply trying to survive.

 

The most vulnerable part of the life cycle is at

fertilization. Corn silk dries out rapidly in the heat, and

prevents pollen tubes from reaching the kernels. Similarly,

the fertility of rice falls from 100% at 34C to nearly zero

at 40C. In north India, a 1C rise in temperature did not

reduce wheat yields, but a 2C rise lowered yields at almost

all of 10 sites. There was a decline in irrigated wheat

yields ranging from 37 to 58% from heat alone; and when

increased CO2 was factored in – which tends to increase

photosynthesis - the decline ranged from 8 to 38%.

 

Grain production has been dropping

 

The problems of water shortage and increased temperatures

are already hitting grain yields. Grain production has been

declining in some smaller countries; but it is now falling

in China, the most populous country in the world. Over the

past five years, China's grain harvest has dropped from 390

million to 340 million tonnes – a drop equal to the grain

harvest of Canada.

 

Sooner or later, says Lester Brown, China will enter the

world grain market for imports, and that will cause food

prices to rise, especially as world grain reserves are at an

all time low.

 

In 2002, the world grain harvest of 1 807 million tonnes

fell short of the world grain consumption by 100 million

tonnes, or 5 percent. This shortfall, the largest on record,

marked the third consecutive year of grain deficits,

bringing stocks to the lowest level in a generation.

 

In such a situation, the first to suffer will the world's

poorest and hungriest. The United Nations Food and

Agriculture Organisation (FAO) latest estimates, based on

data from the years 1998-2000, put the number of

undernourished people in the world at 840 million. But since

1998-2000, world grain production has fallen 5 percent,

suggesting that the ranks of the hungry may be swelling.

 

" Food is fast becoming a national security issue as growth

in the world harvest slows and as falling water tables and

rising temperatures hint at future shortages, " says Lester

Brown.

 

More than 100 countries now import wheat. Some 40 countries

import rice. Iran and Egypt rely on imports for 40 percent

of their grain supply. Algeria, Japan, South Korea and

Taiwan import 70% or more. Israel and Yemen import more than

90%. And just 6 countries - the US, Canada, France

Australia, Argentina and Thailand - supply 90% of grain

exports. The US alone controls almost half of world grain

exports.

 

China importing grain to make up for its deficits could

destabilize world grain market overnight. When the former

Soviet Union bought grain from the world market in 1972 for

roughly a tenth of its grain supply following a bad harvest,

the world wheat prices climbed from $1.90 to $4.89 a bushel.

 

" Ecological meltdown "

 

The problem of declining food production is dwarfed by the

ecological impacts of the over-exploitation of resources to

keep production high. China is singled out for " ecological

meltdown " .

 

Since 1980, China's economy has expanded more than fourfold.

Income has also expanded by nearly fourfold lifting more

people out of poverty faster than at any time in history.

But this has resulted in over-ploughing, over-grazing, over-

cutting of forests and over-pumping of aquifers.

 

With a population of 1.3 billion and 400 million cattle,

sheep and goats, " weighing heavily on the land " and grazing

flocks stripping the land of protective vegetation, a dust

bowl has been created on a scale not seen before. China is

at war with expanding deserts. Old deserts are advancing and

new deserts forming. With little vegetation remaining in

parts of northern and western China, the strong winds of

late winter and early spring can remove millions of tonnes

of topsoil in a single day, soil that would take centuries

to replace. The Gobi Desert expanded by 52 400 square

kilometres between 1994 and 1999, and is now within 150

miles of Beijing.

 

Millions of rural Chinese may be uprooted and forced to

migrate eastward as the deserts claim their land.

Desertification has already driven villagers from their

homes in Gansu, Inner Mongolia and Ningxia provinces.

Unfortunately, they do not have an obvious place to escape

to within China. Such `environmental refugees' will be

increasingly common.

 

China's dust storms are spreading beyond its borders. On

April 12, 2002, South Korea was engulfed by a huge dust

storm from China that shut down schools and cancelled

flights, and clinics were overrun with people having

difficulty breathing. Koreans have come to dread the arrival

of what they now call " the fifth season " of dust storms from

China.

 

Plan B for survival

 

Plan A – business as usual – must be replaced by plan B as a

matter of urgency if we are to avoid the food bubble

bursting, and with it, famine on a global scale, disease

epidemics, social and political unrest, and wars.

 

Plan B means shifting from a carbon-based energy economy to

a hydrogen-based one to stabilize climate change. Iceland is

the first country to adopt that as its national plan.

Denmark and Germany are leading in wind-generated energy;

Japan in solar cells. The evolution of fuel cells and

availability of hydrogen generators will contribute to

building a climate-benign hydrogen economy. The Netherlands

has shown what can be achieved by phasing out motorcars in

favour of bicycles. The Canadian province of Ontario is

phasing out coal. It is replacing its five coal-fired power

plants with gas-fired plants, wind-farms and making

efficiency gains; the net result is to reduce carbon

emissions equivalent to taking 4 million cars off the road.

 

Plan B means stabilizing world population at around 7.5

billion, as some 34 countries in the world have already

stabilized their populations. It means increasing the

productivity of water in agriculture, for example, by drip-

irrigation pioneered in Israel. It means halting soil

erosion by replanting trees, adopting minimum-till, no-till

and other soil-conservation practices.

 

Finally, it means restructuring the entire economy by

creating an " honest market " , one that " tells the ecological

truth " , by including the indirect costs of goods and

services into the prices, that values nature's services

properly and respect the sustainable-yield thresholds of

natural systems such as fisheries, forests, rangelands and

aquifers.

 

For petrol, calculating the true costs to society means

including the medical costs of treating people made ill from

polluted air, the costs of acid rain in damages to lakes,

forests, crops and buildings, and most of all from global

warming. Various studies have produced estimates of petrol

prices raised to $3.30, or even $8.64 a gallon if drivers

were to pay some of the indirect costs, including the

military costs of protecting petroleum supply lines and

ensuring access to Middle Eastern oil.

 

An example of valuing nature's services is the decision of

the Chinese government to ban all tree cutting in the

Yangtze River basin after the flooding in 1998, which

inflicted $30 billion worth of damages. The ban was

justified by according to standing trees a worth three times

that of cut trees.

 

A further measure is to shift taxation – lowering income

taxes while raising taxes on environmentally destructive

activities.

 

Sustainable agriculture left out

 

While most of the measures in plan B are laudable, they do

not add up to the radical " restructuring " of the bubble

economy called for.

 

Edward Goldsmith, Paul Hawken, David Korten and others have

argued convincingly that the fatal error of our bubble

economy is that it is predicated on unlimited growth. A

major part of the solution may well involve abandoning

unlimited growth as a matter of policy and as an index of

progress and well-being, for an alternative economic model

that emphasizes stability, autonomy and self-renewal at

every level. But that's not going to happen so long as the

dominant model of economic globalisation of the World Trade

Organisation (WTO) holds sway.

 

Another weakness of plan B is that after having painted a

dire picture of the unsustainable food bubble created by

decades of industrial monoculture, Lester Brown nevertheless

fails to call for a comprehensive shift to sustainable

agriculture that would tackle the problems he has mentioned

head on, as well as ones he hasn't mentioned, the most

obvious being that industrial monoculture is extremely

energy inefficient and dependent on fossil fuel, which too,

is fast running out.

 

Organic and agroecological farming, by contrast, are proving

productive, energy and resource efficient and

environmentally friendly; they are able to provide food

security for the poorest farmers, to protect biodiversity,

to regenerate degraded land, and to turn soil from a carbon

source back into a carbon sink. They are the key to

delivering health to the nation, whether rich or poor (as

described in articles in successive issues of Science in

Society http://www.i-sis.org.uk/isisnews.php; also The Case

for a GM Free Sustainable World

http://indsp.org/ISPreportSummary.php.).

 

It is nothing short of scandalous that out of the £500

million allocated to implementing the UK government's

Strategy for Sustainable Farming and Food (Department for

Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, London

www.defra.gov/farm/sustain/newstrategy/strategy.pdf), only

£5 million was earmarked for supporting organic agriculture.

 

The reason is that adopting truly sustainable agriculture

would entail major conceptual and structural changes to the

food production and delivery system that many governments,

including the UK, are not prepared to face up to. These

include rejecting global " competitiveness " and " efficiency "

as artificially defined by the WTO to perpetuate the

iniquitous exploitation of the world poor by the rich that

has added untold misery to the lives of Third World farmers

and food miles to agricultural produce shipped across the

globe. They include, instead, supporting local production

and consumption and shortening the food-supply chain to

ensure that farmers get a fair price for their produce and

consumers get the benefit of fresh, nutritious and health-

promoting food while reducing global carbon dioxide

emission.

 

 

Buy now from

 

Amazon.com

www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0393325237/instituofsc0c-20

 

Amazon.co.uk

www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0393325237/instituofscie-21

 

 

========================================================

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http://www.i-sis.org.uk/

 

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press-release ISIS Director m.w.ho

 

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